You may have never heard of Living in Bondage, Desperate Billionaire, or any other works coming out of Nigeria's exploding homegrown film scene, but Nollywood has become the world's third-largest movie industry. In this solid documentary, directors Ben Addelman and Samir Mallal plop you into the overwhelming sprawl of Lagos, covering vast territory at breakneck speed (the history of Nigerian colonialism and economic collapse, the major Nollywood players, the rise of born-again Christianity and its impact on filmmaking), and they manage to do it without losing too much in translation. Babylon leaves you with an intense craving to trawl Google for more specimens of Nollywood's "pop-pop, sharp-sharp, let's-go-let's-go style."

REVIEW: HANSEL &AMP; GRETEL: WITCH HUNTERS | January 30, 2013 From the occult-infested mind of Dead Snow director Tommy Wirkola comes another craptastic orgy of gore — one that's way better than it has any right to be.

LEMON GOES TO NEVERLAND | November 29, 2012 Three years in the making, Lemon #5, "King of Pop," pays homage to the memory of Michael Jackson with mind-boggling flair.